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Logical Habitus

The preconscious, embodied orientation toward what counts as logical reasoning—the sense, developed through cultural training and education, of which inferences feel natural, which contradictions feel intolerable, which argument forms feel convincing. Logical Habitus explains why people from different educational backgrounds or cultural traditions can look at the same argument and have opposite intuitive responses: one feels it as airtight deduction, the other as obvious fallacy. It's not that one is logical and the other isn't—it's that they've acquired different senses of what logic feels like. Western formal logic is one logical habitus; dialectical logic is another; Buddhist logic with its tolerance of paradox is another. Logical Habitus operates as a felt sense of rightness in reasoning, below the level of explicit rule-following.
Example: "To him, the argument was obviously valid—modus ponens, clear as day. To his friend trained in a different logical tradition, it felt like a trick. Neither was irrational; they just had different Logical Habitus."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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Logical Simplification Bias

A pervasive cognitive bias and metabias, especially rampant in social media comments and replies, where complex, multi-dimensional issues—spanning technology, science, politics, history, and society—are aggressively reduced to simplistic logical formulas that sound reasonable but actually function as conversation-stoppers. The sufferer deploys phrases like "that's not logical," "it's too easy to make conspiracy theories," or "it's hard to build" as universal solvent, dissolving any claim that exceeds their narrow frame of reference without engaging its substance. This bias typically couples with Truth Bias (assuming one's own perception captures the whole truth) and Objectivity Bias (treating one's culturally-conditioned reasoning as universal reason itself).

The logical simplifier doesn't argue against specifics—they argue against complexity itself. Presented with speculation about advanced technology, they respond with generic difficulty assertions. Confronted with political possibility, they invoke governmental messiness as if chaos precluded capability. Faced with any claim outside consensus, they deploy the "conspiracy theory" label as automatic disqualifier. The bias lies in treating these logical-sounding simplifications as sufficient responses, when they actually bypass the difficult work of engaging evidence, possibility, and the vast territory between "proven fact" and "obvious nonsense."
Example: "When someone suggested the government might have energy weapons, he didn't discuss the physics or history—his Logical Simplification Bias fired instantly: 'it's hard to build, government is messy, so not logical, it's easy to make conspiracy theories.' He'd reduced decades of classified research, unknown technological progress, and genuine historical secrecy to a sound bite that made him feel rational while learning nothing."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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Logical Moralism

The practice of using formal logic and logical reasoning as a basis for moral judgment—condemning positions as "illogical" as if logical consistency were the highest ethical value, or deriving moral conclusions from logical premises as if ought could be deduced from is. Logical moralism treats moral disagreements as failures of reasoning, assuming that if everyone just thought clearly enough, they'd arrive at the same ethical conclusions. It's the philosopher who thinks teaching logic will eliminate prejudice; the debater who treats every moral question as soluble through syllogism; the rationalist who believes irrationality is the source of all evil. Logical moralism mistakes one tool of thought for the whole of moral wisdom.
Example: "He couldn't engage with her moral concerns—he just kept pointing out where her arguments were 'illogical,' as if logical consistency was the only thing that mattered. Pure Logical Moralism, mistaking reasoning for righteousness."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
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Logical Puritanism

A culture of purity centered on logical correctness—treating any failure of formal reasoning as not just mistaken but morally suspect, any deviation from logical orthodoxy as corruption. Logical puritanism demands that all arguments be formally valid, all inferences be deductively sound, all reasoning be explicit and complete—standards that no actual human reasoning ever meets. It then uses the inevitable failures as grounds for condemnation, treating the gap between real human cognition and ideal logic as evidence of vice rather than just the human condition. Logical puritanism is what makes online debate so miserable: every rhetorical shortcut is a sin, every informal inference is a crime, and the goal is not understanding but exposure of error.
Example: "He couldn't engage with her argument—he was too busy cataloging every informal fallacy, treating each as a moral failing rather than just how humans talk. Logical Puritanism: making logic a weapon instead of a tool."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
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Logicrare Divine

It's a popular brand that mostly deals in astrology. Funny enough, the founder of this company is still unknown.
Honestly speaking, Logicrare Divine reminds me of The Astrology Podcast by Chris Brennan.
by redroselily February 3, 2025
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Logical Marian Assumption

The Logical Marian Assumption, is the opposite, of my Illogical Marian Assumption. It's also, my joke, on The Marian Assumption, and a logical assumption.
Our Lord Jesus Christ, proclaims The Logical Marian Assumption. He says, The Virgin Mary, his mother, is pure, and chaste enough, to be brought, bodily to heaven! Amen! Another joke!
by I'mcrazy May 28, 2025
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logicbombed

To completely derail a conversation, system, or AI by introducing a clever, unexpected logic twist.
“I tried to get a straight answer, but the AI got logicbombed halfway through.”
“He logicbombed the whole quiz with one meta-question.”
by save_the_urbandictionary October 20, 2025
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